On 6/12/2023 11:38 AM, Emilio Pozuelo Monfort wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 - ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Debian LTS Advisory DLA-3452-1 debian-lts@lists.debian.org https://www.debian.org/lts/security/ Emilio Pozuelo Monfort June 12, 2023 https://wiki.debian.org/LTS - ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Package : thunderbird Version : 1:102.12.0-1~deb10u1 CVE ID : CVE-2023-34414 CVE-2023-34416 Multiple security issues were discovered in Thunderbird, which could result in denial of service or the execution of arbitrary code. For Debian 10 buster, these problems have been fixed in version 1:102.12.0-1~deb10u1. We recommend that you upgrade your thunderbird packages.
Although unrelated with the security issues above, may I ask something that I noticed for the first time in Thunderbird 102.11.0 (32-bit) that annoys me and what differs from some older versions in the past, as I can remember: In fact, a right click on a message body (in the message pane, F8) opens the 'Save As ...' option. Then in the new opened window a file name shall be entered. However, it is per default offered to save the message under a rather complex name composed by all of these: Subject-Sender <sender_email> Day Time.eml
And for some reason I get the response: 'Unable to save the message. Please check your file name."
So, after testing different variant of file names, I discovered that the best option is when the name includes only the Subject (and not the rest). It makes me wonder if it would be possible for a user to set it per default, so it would not be needed to shorten the file name each time. (I mean, to configure saving the message under a name that includes only the Subject and nothing else.)
Furthermore, I noticed that message saving under a name that includes some non-alphabet characters, such as colon or like, also tends to fail. And it fails under some Linux versions, but not in Windows ones. What may be a reason for that? Thank you.
Miroslav